About MyLakeTown

If you’re the proud owner of a lake home, you know that feeling. The feeling of escape to the place where memories are made and kept for generations.

If you’re on the Board of your Lake Association, you take your responsibility to protect that legacy very seriously. You’ve pledged to ensure the health, future and integrity of your lake and the community surrounding it. And to maintain and enhance the quality of life on the lake for your members.

We’re Your Kind of People

We’re Lake House owners too. We care deeply about our lake and the simple pleasures our Lake Home affords us. We live for the fun we have today. And for the memories we make forever.

That’s why MyLakeTown.com exists. To help Board members do their important work, and to extend the lake experience year round for association members.

MyLakeTown.com is the future of your lake community.

And It Can Be Free to Use...

MyLakeTown can be supported by the kind of businesses your association members are already searching for. Local businesses that surround your lake, and larger regional or national businesses with unique relevance to the lake lifestyle.

MyLakeTown.com can be free for board members through unique sponsorship relationships that deliver value to board members, businesses, and lake association members.

Through the Business Membership Program, local business can pay for your monthly licensing fee. Just by contacting local businesses and asking them to advertise on the website. Heck, what a great way for local businesses to be in front of your Members all year round and for them to show support to the Lake Association.

If your Association is not interested in our Business Membership Program, call us about our Monthly Subscription Plan starting at $24 per month. With this Program you receive All the same Great Software, Service and Support without the Businesses Support Placements. All the MyLakeTown.com benefits are available to your Association for a low month fee. See Pricing.Contact us so we can show you how it can be Free for Your Association.

At New York's Lake George, a 32-mile-long lake located in the Adirondack Mountains, more than 60 researchers are now turning to sensors and connected systems to better understand environmental threats—including road salt, agricultural contaminants, invasive species and the growth of algae—so that they can better protect the lake and its water.

Thanks for publishing the two perspective columns on “Troubled Water” regarding the cleanup of Lake Champlain in the Feb. 1 edition. Unfortunately, neither Elizabeth Courtney nor James Ehlers addresses the true cause of the water pollution, which is the tremendous growth of the human population in the Lake Champlain basin in recent decades. In just Chittenden County the population has grown from 75,000 in 1960 to 160,000 in 2013 or 111 percent.